Journal of Water and Climate Change (Jan 2022)
Ecological drought and its state assessment: a case study in the Yellow River estuary
Abstract
Water cycle has been intensified by global warming, leading to frequent extreme climate events. Drought is an extreme climate phenomenon. Runoff decrease and human water demand increase aggravate the water shortage of regional ecosystems, affecting regional water and land ecosystems and causing ecological drought, river cutoff and water pollution. Finally, the reverse succession and the imbalance of regional ecological structures take place. The clarification of the concept of ecological drought for effective evaluation of regional ecological drought degree has become an urgent important scientific issue to be resolved. Therefore, in this paper, the typical region of the Yellow River estuary was studied for the analysis of characteristics of regional ecological changes and the definition of the concept and connotation of ecological drought. Based on the representative monitoring and early warning indices to ecological drought, the evaluation method and the classification standard of regional ecological drought were proposed. The regional ecological drought includes four levels: I (Severe), II (General), III (Weak) and IV (None). The indicator thresholds of river runoff, biodiversity and vegetation coverage on different ecological drought levels were quantified. The research results can be technically beneficial for the improvement of global ecological drought emergent support capacity and reducing loss due to drought. HIGHLIGHTS The concept of ecological drought in areas with important ecological functions is discussed.; A model with certain applicability for ecological drought assessment is proposed.; The regional ecological drought can be divided into four levels.; The thresholds of leading indicators to different ecological drought degrees are quantified.;
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